NITN | @notintownlive | 07 Jan 2021, 03:59 am
Prem Prakash
Author-journalist Prem Prakash's book Reporting India: My Seventy-Year Journey as a Journalist was launched by External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar at event Kitaab hosted by Prabha Khaitan Foundation in association with Penguin India in December 2020. From Pakistan to Jawaharlal Nehru, the veteran journalist and ANI founder who had reported from ground zero of the India-China War in 1962 spoke on a range of issues in the course of the conversation. India Blooms correspondent Souvik Ghosh brings excerpts
Tell us about your experience of going to East Pakistan covering the Indo-Pak war.
I had to go to East Pakistan, so I did it. What we were hearing then and some reporters filing reports in Calcutta were hearsay. But if one had to know what was happening, he had to get inside (ground zero). Now I often wonder whether I had realised or not that I had a very young family when I was entering. I could have been arrested by the Pakistan Army and shot dead. But I did it. I had gone to Jessore Railway Station to ensure that the world knew that I had been to the location. I did that and was lucky to come back.
.jpg)
You have lamented in the book that the battle was won on the field but was lost in the negotiating table. Why did that happen despite having a strong government and shrewd politicians back in India?
I often wonder whether we Indians as race are very sympathetic or friendly. We have always been emotional even towards the Chinese (China). We had captured Haji Pir with great sacrifice. Somewhere I have felt that we lost out in the game of brinkmanship on many occasions.
Every Prime Minister of India thinks in the initial years of his or her term that the Pakistan issue can be resolved but thinks completely otherwise towards the end. What is it that no Prime Minister could do to resolve the issue?
I wonder whether we are naive, emotional or good people. I don't think this can work out. Once Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq became the Prime Minister of Pakistan, the country had totally changed and moved towards an Islamic extremism. I don't want to be totally pessimistic but I don't think there is a solution with Pakistan round the corner.
.jpg)
Can you tell us in a nutshell about Nehru's legacy?
The biggest legacy is democracy. He saw us as a nation through three General Elections which left India's people with the habit of going into polls and electing a government. That's the biggest legacy which he enjoyed. He was always present in Parliament and he used to interact so much with the rest, media. He was the only Prime Minister to say that the free press was better than a controlled press. I personally feel it's the legacy given to us by him.
We also find criticisms of Nehru. How do you look at him in a balanced way?
Even now I would say that he did a lot of hard work for India. Remember we never made anything (before Nehru). Every penny that India had was spent on building infrastructure, new plants, education. We have got the results of all those investments. He didn't expect a war with China because he had felt the world had seen so much warfare that no nation would solve their political programmes with wars.
.jpg)
Therefore he neglected the Army but in the 20 months he had lived after the war (Indo-Sino war), he had built the Indian Army from 250,000 to half-a-million. He had rearmed the Indian Army. He was concerned about Pakistan which was then fully-weaponized by America. The Americans were no friend of ours at that time.
- Religion without servility: Journalist Anshul Chaturvedi on why Vivekananda speaks to believers and atheists alike
- Culturist Sundeep Bhutoria unveils anthology When Gods Don't Matter at Jaipur LitFest 2026
- Kolkata CP urges elderly to stay alert against digital scams at ‘Pronam’ interaction
- Sona Incubations, Salem picks 17 startups for Rs 11 Mn DST investment, grant
- Visva-Bharati University unveils a transformational roadmap under Vice-Chancellor Dr. Probir Kumar Ghosh
- Sona College of Technology hosts Think Salem 2025: To spur startup opportunity from Tier-2 Cities
- ACM India unveils National AI Olympiad 2026 to spot school talent for global AI stage
- Reject Macaulayan education, reclaim Indian values: H M Bangur’s big World Hindu Economic Forum pitch
- Sona College of Technology: Many academic, research and industry-linked advances in 2025
- Kolkata: ICCR hosts 10th anniversary celebration of Robir Kiran
Indian airline major Air India today announced a significant enhancement to its popular Mumbai-Frankfurt route, with the deployment of its newly delivered, first line-fit (or made-for-Air India)
Saudia, the national flag carrier of Saudi Arabia, and Air India, India’s leading global airline, have signed a codeshare agreement that will take effect in February.
Air India and Saudi Arabia’s flag carrier Saudia will begin a new codeshare partnership from February, allowing both airlines to offer expanded route options and smoother connections for passengers travelling between the two countries.
